Annotation of loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Authoring_NumericalResponse.tex, revision 1.2

1.1       bowersj2    1: \label{Authoring_NumericalResponse}
                      2: 
                      3: \textbf{stringresponse} implements a string answer. An internal \textbf{textline}
                      4: tag (see \textbf{\ref{textline}}) is necessary for the student's
                      5: response to go in. It can check the string for either case or order.
                      6: Possible attributes are:
                      7: 
                      8: \begin{itemize}
                      9: \item \textbf{answer}\index{answer}: required. Specifies the correct answer,
                     10: either a perl list or scalar.
                     11: \item \textbf{type}\index{type}: optional. Specifies how the string is
                     12: checked (like the CAPA styles). Possible values are:
                     13: 
                     14: \begin{itemize}
                     15: \item \textbf{cs}\index{cs}: \textbf{c}ase \textbf{s}ensitive, order important.
                     16: \item \textbf{ci}\index{ci}: \textbf{c}ase \textbf{i}nsensitive, order
                     17: important. 
                     18: \item \textbf{mc}\index{mc}: case insensitive, order unimportant. The mnemonic
                     19: for this option is {}``\textbf{m}ultiple \textbf{c}hoice'', which
                     20: is how it was used in CAPA: To allow the user to specify choices from
                     21: a multiple choices problem, as in {}``adce'', meaning parts a, d,
                     22: c, and e are true. Order didn't matter in such a problem. In LON-CAPA,
                     23: using \textbf{optionresponse} with True and False foils would be preferable,
1.2     ! vandui11   24: but this will remain supported for easier CAPA to LON-CAPA conversion.
1.1       bowersj2   25: \end{itemize}
                     26: \end{itemize}

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